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Delhi Assembly passes bill to effect 400% hike in MLA salary

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New Delhi: Member of Legislative Assembly of Delhi may become the highest paid MLAs in the country as the Delhi assembly has passed a bill on Thursday that will give whopping 400% hike in basic salary besides significant hike in a slew of allowances to the MLAs considering rising cost of living.

Delhi government will send the bill to the Centre, after its nod basic salaries of Delhi lawmakers will rise from current Rs 12,000 to Rs 50,000 and their overall monthly package will be around Rs 2.1 lakh as against existing Rs 88,000.

Currently Assam legislators get the highest basic salary at Rs 60,000 a month.

Their overall package will top that of members of Parliament at Rs 140,000 a month and Himachal Pradesh, which has the highest paid state legislators at Rs 125,000 a month.

As per provisions of the bill, the basic salary of a minister will be Rs 80,000 which is currently Rs 20,000. If the Centre approves the Bill, then salaries of Delhi legislators will among the highest in the country.

Overall the hike proposed is two-and-a-half fold.

“The bill proposes to increase the salaries, allowances and other facilities of the Members of the Legislative Assembly of Delhi so as to facilitate them to work effectively in their fields,” Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia said, presenting the bill in the assembly.

The Members of the Legislative Assembly of the Government of NCT of Delhi (Salaries, Allowances, Pension) Amendment Bill 2015 was drafted based on a report of a three-member committee chaired by former Secretary General of Lok Sabha PDT Achary. “We have accepted all the recommendations of the panel,” Sisodia said.

In July, a group of AAP legislators had demanded a significant hike in salary, arguing their earnings were not enough to run their family and offices.

Apart from basic salary, the bill proposes hiking constituency allowance from current Rs 18,000 to Rs 50,000, saying the current amount was “grossly” inadequate.

The bill also provides for a reimbursable sum of Rs 70,000 per month was also recommended as allowance under ‘Secretarial, Research and Office Assistance’ head which is Rs 30,000 at present.

An ‘office rental and related utilities’ allowance of Rs 25,000 has been proposed for meeting expenditure on office space and other essential amenities provided by government agencies.

As per the bill, the legislators will be entitled to a communication allowance of Rs 10,000 per month as well as Rs 30,000 as monthly conveyance allowance for each MLA.

The ‘daily’ allowance of each MLA during every sitting of the House or its committees has been proposed to be hiked from Rs 1,000 to Rs 2,000.

The salaries of Leader of Opposition, Speaker, Deputy Speaker and Chief Whip will be on par with the ministers.

The one-time allowances of MLAs have also been recommended to be increased significantly with one time ‘office furnishing’ allowance of Rs 1 lakh, Rs 60,000 for purchasing office equipment and a vehicle loan of Rs 12 lakh, which is Rs 4 lakh at present.

Lawmakers’ salaries were last increased by 100 per cent in September 2011 by the then Sheila Dikshit government, citing inflation and the rise in the cost of living.

The Bill also provides for a hike in monthly pension from the existing Rs 7,500 to Rs 15,000 per month for first term of membership and an additional pension of Rs 1,000 per month for every successive year of membership beyond the first term, Achary said.

The family pension has been recommended at 50 per cent of the pension being paid to a deceased member or an ex-member, he said.

The bill also features a maximum reimbursable travel allowance of Rs 3 lakh per annum for each MLA and his dependents by air, rail, road or steamer.
In an important recommendation, the bill also provides for a 10 per cent hike in the basic salary, Rs 5,000 per month, after every 12 months, from the date on which new salary and allowances come into force.

The three-member committee of experts had finalised its 21-page “unanimous report” in October.

The committee, including non-official members KV Prasad and Balraj Malik, went through pay and allowances structures of many state assemblies as well as those of the US Congress, UK, Australia and many other Commonwealth nations.

The Delhi Cabinet on November 28 had approved the hike in salaries and allowances of the MLAs.

Both BJP, which has three legislators and Congress with no representative in the House, had opposed the hike.

(With PTI inputs)

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